Saturday, October 20, 2018

The New Deal Constituted a Radical Displacement of the Morgans by a Coalition Led by the Rockefellers, the Harrimans, Kuhn-Loeb, and the Lehman Brothers

The Rockefellers and their intellectual and technocratic entourage were, indeed, central to the New Deal. In a deep sense, in fact, the New Deal itself constituted a radical displacement of the Morgans, who had dominated the financial and economic politics of the 1920s, by a coalition led by the Rockefellers, the Harrimans, Kuhn-Loeb, and the Lehman Brothers investment banking firms. The Business Advisory Committee of the Department of Commerce, for example, which proved highly influential in drawing up New Deal measures, was dominated by the scion of the Harriman family, W. Averill Harriman, and by such Rockefeller satraps as Walter Teagle, head of Standard Oil of New Jersey. Here we have space to trace only the influence of the Rockefellers, allied with the Wisconsin progressives and the graduates of the settlement houses, in creating and imposing on America the Social Security System.

--Murray N. Rothbard, The Progressive Era, ed. Patrick Newman (Auburn, AL: Mises Institute, 2017), 356.


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